This was a huge project and my longest video to date! A long overdue update to my IR cooling paint project, this time using common and very affordable materials. Besides the paint itself I was happy to discover some new methods for making size controlled calcium carbonate microspheres. That may prove useful for all sorts of things. www.patreon.com/NightHawkProjects
wonder if an airless sprayer might work, these can spray thick paint. Could these pigment be mixed with car spray lacquer and sprayed on. Some of the colour shifting paints don't dissolve and have to well mixed into lacquer (ref: dip your car channel)
By far this video is the most informative and well designed video I've seen in some time. Concise, with references and intuitive explanations! The tech is superior in so many ways due to ease of use, price point and availability. The tech is also cutting edge with novel viewpoints. Most importantly, you have shared this for free, speaking volumes of your character and thought process. Bravo and thank you.
How about automatic Ikea shutters one with the cooling paint and one black. Depending on the temperature they one drives up an the other down. With that temperature control in a room would be pretty easy.
I'm a chemistry professor and I run a research lab. I spend an embarrassing amount of time consuming science content on UA-cam. I can confidently say that this is the best research process I have ever seen demonstrated on UA-cam. Presuming you have robust and reproducible data of all the observations you present in this video, this is easily a publishable project and I think it would benefit A LOT of people if you were to pursue publishing this work. There are a lot of people in my profession who wouldn't be inclined to follow the science presented in a UA-cam video, but would confidently follow the exact same science if it appeared in peer-reviewed publication. I don't think they're correct in that perspective, but I know that bias exists. Anyway, please consider publishing this work, and if you wanted or needed any input to help pursue that I would be more than happy to offer any assistance I can. ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT WORK!
Have you considered (or tried) using a clear acrylic paint as your binder/resin? You may lose the scattering effect of the water inclusions, but you may end up with a coating that has some environmental durability. To test, just put some of your powder into some polyacrylic paint (Minwax makes one) and test rest them side by side in your box. The other advantage is that a paint based solution would be applied using a roller.
@@jmacd8817 I'd like to see it tested with clear hobby acrylic paint as base and if some thinner is used, it should prob be sprayable with an airbrush or equivalent
"There are a lot of people in my profession who wouldn't be inclined to follow the science presented in a UA-cam video, but would confidently follow the exact same science if it appeared in peer-reviewed publication." Interesting since a large number of research papers and even peer-reviewed publications have been shown to be garbage. I guess you can chalk that up to the hubris of the expert class.
This is actually incredible! Seriously, he just took something that was previously very impractical and created a recipe that can not only be mass produced, it's also easy, safe, and inexpensive enough to do at home. And he posted it all on the internet. For free.
absolutely love how this dude vanishes for months and comes back like "sorry for the absence guys my NASA grade research and development that I conducted in a barn took longer than expected" love the work and how well put together your videos are dude. I eagerly and patiently await future breakthroughs!
Knowing how much NASA likes to "crank the silly thing"(actual comment in AGC source code as annotation for astronauts), I wouldn't be surprised if NASA already hired him.
Better have patience to wait, bc this is bs. He should stick to programming. No one coming up in science ever took soil chemistry. And people think they can just take a crack at it and independently arrive at stuff they could have looked up in school. This is worse than selling solar anywhere east of the salt divide in north America or bogus windmills with wispy blades. Hey everyone let’s whitewash everything like Tom Sawyer. Hey paint my fence for me, it’s fun! That’s all that’s happening here, fancy whitewash. It’s diminishing returns making the spherules. Just paint things white smh 🤦
Honest quality content takes time to produce and get results. I chuckle at the ones that say “I halved my calorie intake for a month ” yet three days before had “I ate double my calorie intake for a month” and between they have countless other videos they couldn’t possibly be able to do “I visited every disney theme park worldwide in a day”, “I stayed inside every wonder of the world for a week covered in mayonnaise”
My company is in R&D for sky cooling liquid applied acrylic roof coating. We are using a crosslinking acrylic that "mends" together between coats to create a solid, durable membrane. Given that this recipe is out now..I guess it doesn't matter to keep it a secret anymore lol. I will make a new video with results of small scale tests. We currently have capacity to produce 30000 square feet of 60mil thickness of liquid applied membrane. It can be sprayed with a standard paint pump, or rolled on with 1-1/2" nap. @Nighthawkinlight thanks for this amazing contribution. This will not only reduce heat waste, but also reduce consumption of electricity for air conditioning. My hat is off to you!
UPDATE: Our test results were better than other coatings in the market, but only by a fraction of a percent! As we added more powder to the ratio, the resulting membrane developed microfractures, some of which went all the way through. So it was a no-go. We are now developing a prefinished roof panel system instead. This takes out all the guesswork and human error that occurs while spraying or rolling it out as well. It will take some time to recover from the losses incurred from the coating system tests. In short, we are giving a customer another new roof.. We will be putting together a panel coater conveyor system complete with heated curing. There are many hoops to jump through for metal paneling to be approved by the various testing organizations, but I am going to be optimistic. We have learned that using very thin coats and a more rigid acrylic base gives the sky cooling results, but it is not as durable. (pressure washer with brine added to the soap dispenser to simulate the expensive salt water test) We will likely provide a variety of sky cooling panels that range in warranty length and, inversely, sky cooling effectiveness. All this to say results will be coming in a few months more.
I first discovered your channel when I was 12 in the good old days of actual life hacks and cool experiments. You were one of my favorite channels among CRH, hacksmith, TKOR to name a few. I am now 21 and you have consistently amazed me and thought me more than school ever did and I want to express my gratitude and love for what you do and who you are. Thank you.
@@Nighthawkinlight hacksmith and tkor fell a LONG way. Good job staying human and making good stuff and explaining stuff without taking the audience for morons. your channel is one of the very few I still watch and follow, even after touching grass.
No joke, as a PhD candidate, I feel like you’re genuinely putting a lot of scientists to shame with such an excellent presentation. This is what good science is, not this ivory tower crap we’ve got so much of now. My PI acts like we’re real hot shit just because we have some reasonably fancy and nice equipment, but the way we do science is just not the way it should be, and you’re demonstrating how great science is when you do it right
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket It's a bit of an oversimplification. It's easier to get published if you already have a good reputation, but it's entirely possible to publish without a reputation as well. The real problem are the large journals/publishers like Springer et al. As a non-established scientist you're probably better off publishing to SciHub than through a traditional publisher...
The thing is, What you can start exploring depends on what you Know. All learning is Good. Having fancy machines can make some things so much easier to explore, which is Hot Shit !
I’m an undergrad involved in research and it pisses me off. We spend as much as the government will give us and get equipment that’s like $50 for a nut and our experiments don’t go anywhere because the shit breaks and there’s no one to fix it. I could do so much more with $2000 than my PI. He’s great, but science, like government, is too big and wasteful to do anything good nowadays. We should be exploding with knowledge because of the exponential growth of knowledge, but we aren’t because it’s being bogged down with white collar bullshit and they spend all their time in worthless fucking meetings while my own interests and ideas aren’t shit to them. I’m gonna save the world without them and do it on my own or with people who are actually bent on making progress.
As a chemist, I love how you make things my colleagues and I would spend thousands of dollars on to research, just with household objects. You are an inspiration.
Seriously, this dude is a legend. Been following his channel for years and he's like a blue collar Einstein. Probably a better comparison out there, I just can't think atm. His channel has gotten me through so many at home projects.
I didn't scroll through all the comments, but in case no one else mentioned this about research article fees: when you hit a paywall (i.e., a journal wants to charge you for an article) you can often email the authors (especially the marked "corresponding author") and ask for a copy of the article and they will usually send you a copy for free if it's for educational purposes. Those article fees are ridiculous and anyone doing educational stuff like this should not have to pay them out of pocket! Also, like a lot of others said, this is really impressive work. Thank you for sharing!
This is the first time I've given money to a UA-cam creator. And I'm not even 25% of the way through. You deserve so much more for this incredible invention. I'm blown away that you are giving away this technology.
@@AstralKetamineX does it cool to below ambient temps? im aware of highly reflective paints that prevent heat absorption, but the ability to radiate heat to sub-ambient temperatures would surprise me. brand?
I worked in the coating industry as a formulator for about 10 years. For application you can potentially look into wire bar applicators to help apply an even surface. Application also depends on if the paint has a low enough viscosity and a low enough surface tension to be able to self level. You could also look into addition of a wetting agent which would likely be some sort of surfactant. Ideally this coating could be made much much thinner in which case you need to ensure an even dispersion of the particles without aglomeration. I loved this video and the level of instruction and detail!
@@jeremybyington I would think that getting it into a paintable formulation (brush or roller) would be a benefit outweighing the need for any large number of coats to achieve efficacy.
@@jeremybyington I guess it depends on how much of the effect is just a surface effect. Reflectance portion is surface effect. I'm not 100% about the emission part.
I have a feeling that in 20 - 40 years a bunch of really accomplished people will cite you as an important childhood influence. I can't think of another time where the process of making & iterating has been so visible.
My interest in science and research has been shaped by people like you on UA-cam. Thank you for your efforts. It has made a big difference to many people.
Thank you for putting your money into something that is useful... for people like me .. poor but can benefit from this person ... I hope my idea comes thru
I normally don't comment on videos, but I just wanted to say that the content you are creating is singlehandedly pushing the boundaries of home science. In addition to how well the information was presented, this discovery could absolutely be a breakthrough in home cooling, and it is done using very simple materials and at a level that anybody could replicate. This is truly inspirational material for any future scientists; please keep up the great work.
Former STEM grad student here - I've seen the term "citizen science" thrown around in research papers! It's exciting to see breakthroughs like this happen in an accessible way!
I've said before that developing this into a quality coating material should be a government initiative and the product should be sold at scaled prices to an individuals income level with limits to allow enough paint per person to use for personal use. This technology clearly has the capability to effect our national electric consumption for cooling costs measurably across the sun belt for a large portion of the year and if leveraged into removable panels, could impact even more northern areas for the Summer months. I think we are fast reaching the point that everyone should be contacting their government representatives to make this happen.
@@surajchougule4351 Thanks, I've picked up everything myself to make a batch, including 2 different mediums to apply it with (i.e. Spar Urethane). Am traveling now, but when home next I'll be making a small test batch and working on getting a good medium and proper mix to achieve the reflectivity. In the meantime, more than a little shocked someone didn't immediately contact the Purdue guys and get this headed into the market. SOMEONE is going to sell a LOT of this when that happens and the roofing manufacturer that gets it integrated into their product will do the same. Happy to swap notes though.
What a legend. The open source approach to sharing your education and the discoveries you've made with us, is nothing short of amazing. Your consummate scientific brilliance is admirable.
Recommendation for paint/coating application: Attach two parallel guide rails to your canvas, place a dollop of your coating at one end, and use a squeegee perpendicular to the guide rails, wiping down to spread the coating evenly across the rest of the canvas. The height of the guide rails will determine the thickness of the coating.
That's pretty much what I was thinking, at the right consistency this is less of a paint and more of a putty or paste. Would be pretty trivial to skim-coat large surfaces with a similar method to how you apply drywall mud or plaster on walls.
It might be possible to have a solder mask cut (probably in a diamond grid pattern) so you could apply it the same way as a pcb gets pasted. You'd probably need a more viscous coating for it to work though. Spread it on with a stainless scraper, and remove the mask. The fluid should spread out a bit after its removed, and gravity should flatten it out and fill in the missing spots. You could also play around with the thickness of the stainless mask too.
Nice to see that a few of us came to the same solution! However this would only allow for one size of panel, but especially for experimentation would make everything a lot more consistent
My folks live out in the sticks in Central Texas, no river and no wells. They have a rain catchment system but there’s been no rain so they’ve had to truck in water. What they do have is humidity. They put a condensation recovery system on their AC and get a good 3-5 gallons a day off the AC for their 150 sq ft cabin. My Dad and I are trying to figure out how to use these panels as condensate catchers to farm water from the air. Right outta Tattooine :D We’re also going to cover their water tanks in this stuff and see how it holds up to the weather. The tanks aren’t shaped in a way that allows for the film shield, but right now the dark green tanks heat the water so hot we can’t bathe the baby in it. Just getting it down to ambient would be great. BTW I knocked together a spreadsheet that gives you volume and price predictions based on how many square feet you want. It’s tuned to the local stores but should be easy to modify. Let me know and I’ll send you a Google doc link. (Edit: I mean, I'm sure you had to price out all that R&D you did, but this one could be published. I can polish it up to make it easier for people to customize)
When NightHawkInLight drops a 40 minute video, you know he's about to drop some golden knowledge. (Lowkey wanna try this paint on my Sony cameras to see if they would actually work in the Texas sun)
@@ChaosPootato Haha Fair enough. Mostly just quipping on something relatable to fellow video/production enthusiasts. Lol Nice name btw. Got some layers going on there.
My grandparents used to paint their glass houses with quicklime and soda in the summer. It does have to be renewed regularly when it rains, but the effect was clearly noticeable as the plants fared better in the heat and water consumption decreased.
I think you should publish a paper on this. You've done the research, you have references to existing literature and you may well have furthered the field. Your brother is a physicist so you have an easy in if necessary. And by publishing a paper you may inspire some scientists ,like those who published the papers you cited, to further improve the method or even some of the things you talked about at the end.
So some paper mill journal can make 42 dollars per reader selling his work, as he mentions at 12:11? A number of people with experience in the field seem to have found their way to this UA-cam video. What is the future, greedy science and tech journals or AI searches that can find all kinds of information? How many “peer-reviewed articles“ had to be retracted in the last couple of years? I’m certainly no expert, but when a major publisher like Wiley has to shut down 19 journals for low quality, anyone would be skeptical.
here is a "pro tip": often you can just email one (or more) of the authors of those papers and just nicely ask them for a copy. Most often they will be happy to share it, since they are scientists and arent even getting paid anything from those absurd prices (they actually have to pay to publish their paper and get nothing in return from the publisher besides being published)
That is, when they respond. I e-mailed an author for a paper about yeast on pineapple rinds and how they develop. I'm still waiting for a reply to this day.
I have tried it few times but I feel like my emails end up in their spam folder. So I have to use scihub. Itis a blessing for a countless student who can’t dream of paying of that much for single article.
Pouring spheres into the container was a great way to explain the why and how you went about the solution..... I look forward to seeing how well it cools the shed.
I first discovered your channel years ago when you were building pvc air cannons. I was surprised by the innovative yet easily accessible designs for the homemade piston valve. Since then I have watched every new video you post. All of them are very engaging and informative. Your channel stands out as the gold standard for science channels on UA-cam. Now that I'm older and have a job, I can finally repay the creators who have influenced me throughout the years. Keep up the great work!
Bloody hell this is easily more extensive and rigorous research than most PhD thesis. You just doing it for fun and entertainment - let's say I'm strapped in for the ride!
I think this is a huge and enormous breakthrough. Maybe because other findings are hidden, but this knowledge given freely to the public is revolutionary
DUDE!! What you did on your “kitchen counter” for less than the cost of of an expensive meal for two was what colleges spend hundreds of thousands on to discover. Well, well done!!
85 % of college is a scam they wast your life indoctrinate you and then if you have a breakthrough Idea they will steal it and if your lucky maybe they will give you a small footnote in the patent that they file on your hard work and maybe and this is a big maybe you will get a $180,000 dollar a year job out of it your insight and hard work, good luck with college, more then likely you will end up working for Burger King or Amazon to pay off your scam debt.
He did a great job. But, it's important to recognize that these radiative cooling ideas are bouncing around everywhere these days. The research that is the foundation of it: chemical, coating, IR cam, atmospheric science is high-funded research. "Standing on the shoulders of giants." If you take a killer photo with your iPhone does that invalidate, say, Ansel Adams?
I couldn't thank you enough for researching and sharing your findings. You're sharing gives the tools needed for creative minds to develop unique solutions to humanities everyday problems. This video is truly brilliant. Thank you!
I love how much effort you put into low cost reproducibility. Technical and monetary barriers often seem to be a main reason new technology takes so long to reach the general public in any substantial way, but when you address it right from the start I think it will help shorten the gap between conceptual and applied technologies. I can't wait to see what other options you come up with for solvents, binders, and delivery methods for the pigment!
You outdid yourself yet again. What's more this time you even managed to outdo Tech Ingredients which is immensly impressive. Compare them spraying 50 different coatings over the course of the whole day against your cake frosting application once AND your ingredients are even more accessible. Bravo! You really could start a chemical company, you're definitely further ahead in this than any research lab out there. And then there's your non-flammable fireworks.
As a chemist, I must admire your dedication. Some of what you have done here might be applicable to making artificial opal from sodium silicate solution , a project that I have been thinking about trying for a long time.
As a physicist, your application of research and scientific trial and error is incredible! The thought of microspheres has never crossed my mind before, but the presentation of your methods and all you’ve learned was VERY interesting. Awesome video!
Imagine that! Never crossed your mind, well then it surely must be good science! Lol you never once opened a soil science text book. If you had, you would realize this is based on a a rationale that neglects the biggest detail, which is it won’t work in the weather. All I can chalk that up to is y’all can’t conceive of earth systems. Your chemistry knowledge isn’t framed by how these reactions play out and interact in the environment. The only system that accounts for all of chemistry in a way that demonstrates how the periodic table works is in the soil. If you studied this, you’d realize silicon is best suited, not carbon. It’s like a very basic thing, you either see it or you don’t.
For your comments about using citric acid and it not being picky about water quality afterwards, I'll add that in soapmaking, citric acid gets used commonly and it performs "water softening" in the bar. When mixed with the NaOH used in soapmaking, sodium citrate is made in-situ, and keeps sodium soaps (i.e. sodium + fatty acid) in solution, vs them reacting with calcium and magnesium in the tap water, making calcium or magnesium soaps that are less soluble and leave soap scum, and the suds of the soap are less sensitive to water hardness (to a point, everything has its limits)
It's sweltering 45 degrees Celsius here in Bangladesh... absolutely loved this video! It really makes sense now... we need more channels like this on UA-cam... ❤
In my experience, if you reach out to the authors of a published paper, they are usually willing to give you the whole paper for free, or at a reduced price.
@@unvergebeneid The journal plain doesn't get a say in how you use your paper, because you haven't written it on their behalf. The academic institution though under employ of which you have written it, might have a word, but who knows what word that's gonna be.
you sly dog! using the bird to keep us watching during the sponsored segment is pretty clever. all jokes aside, you are incredible, your content is incredible, and everything you do is cool, informative, and really feels like you, as a single person, are making real advancements in science for the layman.
I think you should be given Nobel prize for best video on scientific research which can be practically used for commercial purposes by anyone. You are not only intelligent, you are a very good, selfless human being too, sharing your knowledge with the world freely
Okay, this earned my Patreon support. I've been a fan for years and I think this video exemplifies why @NightHawkInLight is not only a UA-camr's UA-camr but a genuinely kind and caring human being trying to do his part to make the world a better place. This is such a beautiful application of Open Science and it is an honor to be able to support you in your work. My mind is always blown, I always learn a lot, and I'm always well entertained. Thank you!
Agreed but it also showed an example of a much too common instance of NOT Open Science with the research paper ($42) he purchased that like so many was behind a pay wall. I didn't catch the source of the paper but if it originated from a tax-payer funded institution and was available to the general public, if not freely so, it should not cost the tax-paying citizens to review.
You could keep this all to yourself until you achieve a patentable product and instead you’re doing the right thing and sharing your findings in detail with a global audience. That’s commendable as hell, dude.
technically if he filed a patent now after haven publicly sharing it, its my understanding he can reasonably contest any other patent claims posted after this release date. Hence patent pending; a period of time observed to find other patents or reduce the difficultly to extend or reject said patent based on supporting evidence and ability to file in a reasonable fashion. ~This is not legal advice.
No, he should file a patent. Why would him not doing that be "the right thing"? You don't believe that he should get credit or financial compensation for the work he's done? Is very kind and generous for him to share and the information is great. Doesn't mean he shouldn't get sa patent. I would. And so would you. It would be naive not to do so.
@@ChristaFree He should file a patent if only for the sole purpose of preventing someone else from doing so, and monopolizing it like medical companies did with insulin.
@@adondriel you do know a patent shares the information with the wprld right? You want insulin and dont wanna pay big pharma prices? Look up the patent amd do it yourself. Its only illigal if you get cuaght. And im fairly certain no jury will convict you for making your own insulin.
Probably going to get lost in the comments, but you should look into silica encapsulation of your particles to waterproof them. Tetraethyl/Tetramethyl Orthosilicate can be used in small quantities to create thin coats around particles of all kinds using many of the same methods you demonstrated, not the safest thing to work with indoors though.
Ben, you can't imagine how precious your videos are to the community. Not only your stuff is really innovative, you also explain the science behind it, give information about your findings, and the best thing is, you make it open source. I'm not sure if you still working as a teacher, but if you do, I hope your students appreciate it.
Actually reading the comments? Well I love your informative, cleanly cut, no nonsense videos. You really show off the magic that is chemistry! You could be developing this shit for millions for companies but you just do it for our entertainment instead xD Love you!
I had a dream about making this last night, and painting it on the roofs of houses, after falling asleep while listing to NOVA's "Climate Change Crisis." Hopefully, if I don't get to do that, someone reading this will and we won't fight others doing the same. I'm passionately inspired and deeply moved by your determination to make this. Thank you for reminding me what it means to be a scientist. I hope you can get nominated a Nobel prize for this contribution to humanity's future.
Volcanoes and solar flares have more effect to "climate change" than humans ever will. I have no problem with the paint itself, but don't fall for this media-hype of the world falling apart because too many cows and cars belched out gas that natural processes such as photosynthesis can solve on their own.
@@darwinjina I work on Buildings as an HVACR dude. Roofs have been increasingly turning from Black to white over the last 20-30 years. (I don't understand why they were black to begin with? Other than glare? But obviously heat efficiency should have always been priority over glare. The problem is keeping them clean, It is literally impossible. Roofing materials are some of the most durable/flex products on the market nowadays and they still stain and get dirty over time. Obviously we walk all over the roof to fix and install things. He brings this up in the video. Still, a white dirty roof is going to be far cooler than a black roof. But the real money in this project is finding a way to get it into PVC or similar roofing materials. Exciting! I love watching nerdy videos like this, and he explains everything in a way we can all understand. New subscriber here!
@@rheadog9546 You answered your own question. "I don't understand why they were black to begin with? ........ The problem is keeping them clean, It is literally impossible."
Other commenters have said it better, but just, wow. These videos are an inspiration to future generations and show that science is approachable, testable, and practical. Amazing work!
Two things: 1.) I love how proud he is of his work because 2.) he makes it very clear that this is genuinely novel research. I guess a third thing is that science is more accessible than we realize, but what's in short supply is a mindset, not equipment.
for spraying, there are special bigger spraying nozzles for different kinds of substances. The spraying gun used for Plastidip comes to mind. It's very viscous and yet sprays it in fine layers
Unlike some other channels who either flat out lie or did minimal research and then stretch that out to an hour video. With deep sounding music to sound intriguing. Meanwhile you: Disappears for months, drops a banger of a video full to the brim with interesting easy to digest information that you actually try. I love you man ❤. Like you can tell that you actually took the time researching the topic and actually putting it to practice and then seeing about how you can put it in laymans terms for us
It took me a bit to understand why you want a *mix* of sphere sizes, and not just all the tiniest ones. The answer I came up with is that if you replace one large sphere with an equivalent spatial extent of small spheres, you've introduced coverage gaps inside what was previously covered by a single sphere. Really interesting!
I've just finished replicating your experiment and testing some of the paint. The carbonate particles [I had 25g of them] are a success, they are in fact lower than ambient temperature by 2-5 degrees Fahrenheit even before they're made into a paint. I'm in Las Vegas during the height of summer monsoon season so every degree of difference can save someone's life out here. I have some notes: -Without a stir-bar, it took a really long time to dissolve the acrylic. I had wondered why the paint was sepparated and thin. -A painter's knife can apply the paint fantastically -The smaller sizes of nanoparticles are difficult to sepparate out and I think I must have mistaken a lot of them for wastewater as they didn't sepparate out after days. -I used a pie tin instead of a bread tin because I'm cheap, it did not work at all.
I have also tried to dissolve the acrylic in acetone with water as they mentioned it in the video... But after 2 hrs of heating at 60degree celsius... It won't dissolved most of the acetone evaporated 2 to 3 times I added it back for balance the solution.. While adding acetone again can we add water on it... Or the temperature🌡️ is maintained as he suggested
@@Nighthawkinlight Thanks for the reply... 1.The hard stirring is required or not for dissolve acrylic. 2.Acrylic not dissolve as you shown 3.After the acetone evaporated to the minimum level few ml of resin only I have got... Kindly suggest me the better procedure for resin making
Your multiple rinse steps may actually shrink the size of your microspheres a bit. Nanoparticles have a very large surface area so, even though CaCO3 is pretty insoluble some it will dissolve in the rinse water. I discovered this was true when I tried making magnesium fluoride nanoparticles (as a polishing agent). Multiple wash cycles eventually caused the MgF2 to totally disappear! Using LeChatelier's Principle, I found that adding a very small amount of a water-soluble magnesium salt prevented this. You also might be able to use this "problem" to your advantage if your smallest particles aren't quite small enough.
Holy crap, this is genius. Just off the top of my head I feel like the most important parameters to test are to find a way to determine how much (if any) the Water temperature, Duration of each wash cycle and the nanoparticles size will contribute to how much degradation (shrinking) of the spheres occurs. Once a consistent method of testing these parameters is developed and employed, this can be applied with a large array of applications where density, temperature and likewise even pressure (such as hydrostatic pressure in any type of stratified fluid) are key principles to how efficient said application can be. Like using Aqua Regia for dissolving Gold.
I'm stunned by the amount of push you gave to this technology, and then I'm stunned you made it free, for everyone. Ben, if there's a time for you to feel accomplished, now's the time!
A coarse threaded rod should approximate a Mayer rod, for a quick trial. Also, this was a staggering amount of r&d and one of best chemistry videos on UA-cam that I have ever viewed. Well done!
@@pbs41if3Note they said best chemistry video, not best chemistry in a video. There is a difference, and the snobbery shown in your comment is ill-suited to the comment section of an *educational* video.
I live in a 29 foot long, 7.5 foot wide fifth wheel. That's a BIG metal box. My brother lives in a 10 ft wide and 50 ft long mobile home- a bigger metal box. Here in New Mexico, it's HOT, HOT, HOT in the summer. This could not only help people, save money but it could save lives in the summer!
I'm in a 10x12 with a sleeping loft and it's so hot up there it actually takes your breath no joke you can not breath up there from 11am to 3am in the summer leaving me a extremely hot old lady😂😂😂 seriously I spend most of my time outside talk about climate change hot as f k in the summer and cold as f k in the winter there is no happy medium. It's either or never just right ever.
Dude… this is INCREDIBLE. I’ve been super fascinated with these paints since that paper come out a while back. The fact that you developed a method to create this type of coating from cheap and easily accessible materials is so inspiring. You seemed to have nailed the creation of the pigment, so I think a big next step for the community is finding a more durable and applicable base to suspend it in. 🤔 Great work!
@@Jamey_ETHZurich_TUe_RulezYeah, try to cool a house with a fan (and it doesn't consume energy at all, yeah). I don't see a problem with protection if it's just a plastic film (or some sort of other coating)
Dude, there are some damn smart people on UA-cam and you are on the short list at the top. Your videos have always been impressive, but this one is out of the park. As a side note, this is what the internet was designed for. What the academics, engineers, programmers, etc. were all working for. A place to share great ideas with the world. And for those ideas to get improved by others, which then leads to more improvement. Which is friggin awesome!
Like literally though, it was made to share scientific discoveries, papers, data. That was it's original purpose, back when that one guy connected all the computers around CERN to do just that. And then someone went: "Wait, what if this, but worldwide though?"
Just made it to the point you mentioned a white paper you ended up buying access to. Barring a few contracts, the researchers don't see any of that profit, so if you contact them directly they are usually more than happy to send you the whole paper themselves for free. Often, they end up interested enough to answer some questions too.
@@Nighthawkinlight To add to this, there is an even easier solution: most universities have some public-access computers within the university domain, which generally has no-login access to any databases of papers (usually guest computers in the library). Or, just ask a friend who works for a university? It doesn't cost us anything to download individual papers the uni subscribes to, and everyone thinks the per-paper model is terrible.
You probably wouldn't believe me when i say that part of my choice to become an engeneer comes from this channel and your awesome ability to teach (i started watching this when i was 14 and now i am 18). Thanks for your dedication and keep up the good work, love from Italy
If you want to know and teach chemistry. Study agriculture. Everything you need to know about chemistry happens in the soil. It’s literally the interface between biology and geology. He’s taking a snapshot out of context that can be only appreciated after studying the whole picture. Draw your inspiration from how soils work. Want to learn about packing densities? Look at the molecular chemistry of clay aggregates. It’ll get heady very quickly and you’ll be sorry you underestimate the intricacies of soil.
You should try screen printing as a method of applying your mixture. It produces very even layering but you are constrained by the size of the frame used to hold the silkscreen taut. No need to expose a pattern on the silkscreen, you can just place it on your substrate and squeegee the mixture through the screen to apply it on the substrate.
I just posted the same idea and then scrolled down to read the other comments and found you had beat me to it, the only difference in my idea was to just have runners/rails/shims that are the height of the desired paint thickness on the side of the substrate that the scraper/squeegee would ride on. You could easily "paint" a 4x8 sheet of plywood with a concrete bull float riding on a few rails.
I was thinking screen printing while watching the video. I’m not sure that silk screen will give a thick enough coating on one go and wonder whether wire fly screen could be a good option. For thicker coating.
As a screen printer, this is exactly where my mind was going. The screens/applicators could be made very quickly and easily. Just get a large portion of mesh with a micron size that allows for the larger particles to pass through. I’m sure this could be aerosolized as well. There are plenty of differently sized nozzles for paint guns. I just came back from a low rider show and some of the flake used in the paint jobs has to be a good amount larger diameter than the microspheres he’s using in the process. Also. If the paint is self-leveling to a degree, why not just use a roller to apply it to larger surfaces?
Wow wonderful job! This would be perfect for a small home, or tent! Maybe if the paint is combined with something that can flex, such as a fabric, or maybe vinyl it is possible to create a super cooling shirt! This could be the future of fabrics, especially in the hot sun! I could see plenty of uses for this for maybe even shade structures, to keep everyone underneath cool.
The idea of cooling fabrics immediately makes me think of nano-engineering. Maybe we can “tune” textiles with quantum dot technology to absorb heat when cold and radiate it away when hot. This breakthrough could be on par with semiconductors in terms of potential industries with applications including transportation, energy, housing, fashion, agriculture, and who knows what else?!?!
Packing multi-sized spheres has been around a long time, but making them small enough to have a paint which goes on fairly thin is tough. Making all that with ingredients which will reflect IR is pretty amazing.
I think you are the only practical science UA-camr who consistently impresses me. It doesn't matter how boring or irrelevant I think the subject is going to be to me, I always watch all the way through. What's more, I always want to replicate your projects. Even if I know I will never put it to practical use. There are a handful of other affable and infectiously passionate science-tubers, but you fill a singular niche that I lack the skills to describe. It's a wonderful niche, keep it up.
Absolutely incredible and mind blowing. If you were a science teacher, you would have students that would not only LOVE your class but would be totally influenced and involved in everything that you presented to them. I’m almost 70 and I have always loved science and chemistry, this is how I felt the whole time I was watching this. That mixture change and what happened was amazing. I’m now hooked and have subscribed. I found this by researching a good homemade stain remover, go figure, down through the line somehow there you were.
Not sure about other countries, but in Hungary, CaCO3 is traditionally used to paint exterior house walls, although not as commonly nowadays. By heating CaCO3, CO2 is released, and CaO (égetett mész) remains. Adding water to it, you get Ca(OH)2 (oltott mész) and heat. That can be painted on the walls, and it absorbs CO2 from the air, and hardens to a white paint of CaCO3 (mész).
We have this too, 30 years ago we used to spray it almost everywhere except inside the house. Trees, work shops, animal dens, concrete fences, those big round vents in an energy/heating plant. I want to see a comparison now to see how much his method improves it, I bet that acrylic will really give it a boost.
@@szaszm_ Every limestone can dissolve in water. Acid just speeds up the process. Out of dissolve problem, there are still problem on dirty surface from any cause which it raises up heat.
What a freaking legend! NightHawk is the only channel that can drop a 40-minute video that I will drop everything to watch. This is probably the coolest science video I've watched on UA-cam that actually makes me want to try it out for myself.
NightHawkInLight produces great content with experiments that are accessible to the masses, but in my opinion Applied Science has the most cutting edge stuff. Not really the sort of things you can make at home unless you're quite wealthy and have a few PhDs though.
Simply Brilliant. It brings me great joy that there are almost a million people who care enough about chemistry to watch a 40 minute presentation on the thermal dynamic properties of home made paint. Making this commercially viable would most certainly bring the IRE of the Air Conditioning Cartels... actually the people that own the patents on "legal and approved AC Refrigerant".. which last I checked was Honeywell.
That shrinking you're seeing is from solvents evaporating. It is a common occurrence on pretty much anything that has solvents. My first thought about that is that by adding a plastesiser (something to keep the material flexible at all times) this shrinking and cracking can be negates since the material will just stretch a bit. And while originally low concentration of wood glue came to mind, you mentioned silicone and that would be a much better choice. While silicone can be thinned with acetone, your idea of xylol from the "make any fabric waterproof" could work better. Mix some of it with the acetone-based coating and you should get a semi-flexible coating that won't crack. Moreover, using a thinner xylol-silicone mix might even allow for this to be a fabric soak instead of just coating. Imagine an outdoor canopy or an umbrella that actually reflects heat! Speaking of thinned acetone. I mixed a batch of it for a small project (balljoint 'boots' for a go-kart, used fabric hose sleeve as the substrate). Even though i kept the mix in a sealed jar, after a month i am noticing that the silicone is slowly curing (polymerizing?) in the mix, turning into a rather odd gel-like material that can't even hold a shape. By now it feels like what you'd imagine a jellyfish feeling like. A rather curious substance that will no longer soak into fabric, but i'm sure there are other uses for it. Need to let a bit of it dry out and see what happens.
artists sometimes add glycerol to prevent cracking by increasing the drying time. Know that thickens it too though and not sure how it plays with various solvents
This was really an excellent video! I love your content but if you'd told me i would be staying up at 5am to watch someone make paint I wouldn't have believed it. I don't have any particular use or intention of making this, at least for now. But the processes involved and how you took us along on your journey was very satisfying and I thank you for doing this. And you and your bird are clearly good friends which is a beautiful thing.
This is incredible! Keeping a surface that's in the sun to a few degrees lower than a piece in the shade is something I'd be extremely skeptical of if I just randomly read about it. Making it at home is on a whole other level too. Great work!
Thank you thank you thank you!!! ❤❤❤ It gets unbelievably HOT in Arizona! This can save so much money for folks! We spend $700 a month for air conditioning and I’ve been trying to find helpful videos and ideas to keep the house cool without having to use air conditioning! Thank you for sharing all of this important information FOR FREE 🔥🔥🔥
The level of research and analysis in this video is absolutely incredible, and is so much more advanced than a lot of research papers on the subject. I'm so proud of people like you who are able to advance science for the rest of humanity with basic tools accessible to everyone.
I loved every second of this video. I have been following radiative cooling for years now. I am Software developer by profession but always wanted to make my own radiative cooling project. You just made the whole thing seem so easy. Thank you for sharing!! Lots of love from India.
The way you are inventing truly innovative and socially productive things out of such accessible resources using principles of chemistry and the scientific method, is incredibly fascinating. I have never seen anything quite like it on UA-cam.
Your video, research and intentions deserves appreciation ❤... I am from Pakistan, where its too hot in summer and electricity is even more expensive... Its awesome to make your own paint and cool down your property so cheaply... Hats off to your intentions to make the world a better place...
This is what I like to see. I live in the northern US, so it is cold more often than it is hot, so I would have to make removable panels or maybe canvas over my house, or it would make my house even more expensive to heat in the winter! 😳But for you and others in very hot climates, especially in developing areas, this is perfect for you! I love when good people share good science with the world!
I think I saw a video where some people in India were using plastic soda bottles embedded into a panel to make a breeze-powered air conditioner, using the venturi effect. Combine that with the paint here, it might make a big difference. Also search for Iranian cooling tower architecture. They could make ice in the middle of the desert, long before.electricity came along.
you, applied science, braking taps, tech ingredients, thought emporium and others are doing a great job making highly specific and technical knowledge available to laypeople like me.
Imagine the kind of world we would have with more contributions like this one. I'm humbled, amazed and grateful! This is beyond generosity, this builds humanity!
Man, the variety and scope of applications for this pigment is inspiring. Thank you for making this research so accessable! You're the highest class of scientist.
The way you go through your experimental process, factor choices, and null findings is fantastic. I wish more papers were written with this kind of detail. It would save a lot of us a lot of time.
For applying this coating, mix it to a mortar-like consistency and use a grooved trowel of the sort used for laying tile. The grooves make it easy to get an extremely consistent amount of material spread across a surface, and then the smooth side of the trowel smooths over the grooves to give a flat surface.
I was thinking something similar. Flooring contractors have a refillable caulk gun that they use to lay mortar for tile and it has different nozzles for smooth or ridged surfaces
Keeping the coating more textured instead of smoothing it over might actually be better. More surface area means more radiation, and therefore more cooling.
You're one hell of a genius. It's amazing how resourceful you are! To create a safe, cheap and effective recipe for such a novel area, with so few useful learning resources, it's insane! Most people have a hard time replicating thorough and well understood recipes, but you can create something like this with so few resources. You truly deserve all the success in the world!
Amazing how you've continued to evolve over 10 years. Started out very similar to the old style King Of Random and migrated to being applied science! Really awesome
For another applicator possibility, look up gold sniping. Gold prospectors use PVC to build a suction tube, like a reverse plunger, to suck fine, gold bearing material from cracks in river beds. It's like a big syringe. You could ad an end cap of PVC that's been heated and squished in a vice to give a flat applicator that you could also pull back on the handle to keep back pressure on the paint and prevent it from leaking out.
You are easily one of the most wholesome science channels on here. Cutting edge technology translated into a form not only understandable but accessible to the common man is about as virtuous an activity as I can fathom. I have a playlist of “science references” for my own hobbyist projects and your videos make up half that alongside the likes of Nilered, nurdrage, and codyslab. You are truly one of the greats!
This was a huge project and my longest video to date! A long overdue update to my IR cooling paint project, this time using common and very affordable materials. Besides the paint itself I was happy to discover some new methods for making size controlled calcium carbonate microspheres. That may prove useful for all sorts of things. www.patreon.com/NightHawkProjects
wonder if an airless sprayer might work, these can spray thick paint.
Could these pigment be mixed with car spray lacquer and sprayed on. Some of the colour shifting paints don't dissolve and have to well mixed into lacquer (ref: dip your car channel)
By far this video is the most informative and well designed video I've seen in some time. Concise, with references and intuitive explanations! The tech is superior in so many ways due to ease of use, price point and availability. The tech is also cutting edge with novel viewpoints. Most importantly, you have shared this for free, speaking volumes of your character and thought process. Bravo and thank you.
I wonder what carbonated water would do?
How about automatic Ikea shutters one with the cooling paint and one black. Depending on the temperature they one drives up an the other down. With that temperature control in a room would be pretty easy.
This is just brilliant...cutting edge science, in your kitchen! I tip my hat to you sir.
I'm a chemistry professor and I run a research lab. I spend an embarrassing amount of time consuming science content on UA-cam. I can confidently say that this is the best research process I have ever seen demonstrated on UA-cam. Presuming you have robust and reproducible data of all the observations you present in this video, this is easily a publishable project and I think it would benefit A LOT of people if you were to pursue publishing this work. There are a lot of people in my profession who wouldn't be inclined to follow the science presented in a UA-cam video, but would confidently follow the exact same science if it appeared in peer-reviewed publication. I don't think they're correct in that perspective, but I know that bias exists. Anyway, please consider publishing this work, and if you wanted or needed any input to help pursue that I would be more than happy to offer any assistance I can. ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT WORK!
Thank you very much!
Have you considered (or tried) using a clear acrylic paint as your binder/resin? You may lose the scattering effect of the water inclusions, but you may end up with a coating that has some environmental durability.
To test, just put some of your powder into some polyacrylic paint (Minwax makes one) and test rest them side by side in your box.
The other advantage is that a paint based solution would be applied using a roller.
@@jmacd8817 I'd like to see it tested with clear hobby acrylic paint as base and if some thinner is used, it should prob be sprayable with an airbrush or equivalent
CIA....
CHEMISTRY IN ACTION
"There are a lot of people in my profession who wouldn't be inclined to follow the science presented in a UA-cam video, but would confidently follow the exact same science if it appeared in peer-reviewed publication."
Interesting since a large number of research papers and even peer-reviewed publications have been shown to be garbage. I guess you can chalk that up to the hubris of the expert class.
This is actually incredible! Seriously, he just took something that was previously very impractical and created a recipe that can not only be mass produced, it's also easy, safe, and inexpensive enough to do at home. And he posted it all on the internet. For free.
Whats the frl rating though?
It's more difficult to move a tree than a panel in the winter.
@@Jamey_ETHZurich_TUe_Rulezplanting a tree that takes 30 years to even make a difference?
@@Jamey_ETHZurich_TUe_Rulez You can do both at the same time
@@Jamey_ETHZurich_TUe_Ruleza tree won't make you go sub Ambient temperature..
absolutely love how this dude vanishes for months and comes back like "sorry for the absence guys my NASA grade research and development that I conducted in a barn took longer than expected" love the work and how well put together your videos are dude. I eagerly and patiently await future breakthroughs!
I would much rather watch a 40 minute well researched and well produced video once in a while than a blink-and-you-miss-it short every day.
Knowing how much NASA likes to "crank the silly thing"(actual comment in AGC source code as annotation for astronauts), I wouldn't be surprised if NASA already hired him.
Better have patience to wait, bc this is bs. He should stick to programming. No one coming up in science ever took soil chemistry. And people think they can just take a crack at it and independently arrive at stuff they could have looked up in school. This is worse than selling solar anywhere east of the salt divide in north America or bogus windmills with wispy blades. Hey everyone let’s whitewash everything like Tom Sawyer. Hey paint my fence for me, it’s fun! That’s all that’s happening here, fancy whitewash. It’s diminishing returns making the spherules. Just paint things white smh 🤦
Honest quality content takes time to produce and get results. I chuckle at the ones that say “I halved my calorie intake for a month ” yet three days before had “I ate double my calorie intake for a month” and between they have countless other videos they couldn’t possibly be able to do “I visited every disney theme park worldwide in a day”, “I stayed inside every wonder of the world for a week covered in mayonnaise”
Ha! Yup.
My company is in R&D for sky cooling liquid applied acrylic roof coating. We are using a crosslinking acrylic that "mends" together between coats to create a solid, durable membrane. Given that this recipe is out now..I guess it doesn't matter to keep it a secret anymore lol. I will make a new video with results of small scale tests. We currently have capacity to produce 30000 square feet of 60mil thickness of liquid applied membrane. It can be sprayed with a standard paint pump, or rolled on with 1-1/2" nap. @Nighthawkinlight thanks for this amazing contribution. This will not only reduce heat waste, but also reduce consumption of electricity for air conditioning. My hat is off to you!
Very much looking forward to seeing your results!
Wtf more info? What a gold mine for potential roofing applications.
I would seriously like to buy paint for about 100m2. I live in the Netherlands. If possible, let me know please
UPDATE:
Our test results were better than other coatings in the market, but only by a fraction of a percent! As we added more powder to the ratio, the resulting membrane developed microfractures, some of which went all the way through. So it was a no-go. We are now developing a prefinished roof panel system instead. This takes out all the guesswork and human error that occurs while spraying or rolling it out as well. It will take some time to recover from the losses incurred from the coating system tests. In short, we are giving a customer another new roof..
We will be putting together a panel coater conveyor system complete with heated curing. There are many hoops to jump through for metal paneling to be approved by the various testing organizations, but I am going to be optimistic. We have learned that using very thin coats and a more rigid acrylic base gives the sky cooling results, but it is not as durable. (pressure washer with brine added to the soap dispenser to simulate the expensive salt water test) We will likely provide a variety of sky cooling panels that range in warranty length and, inversely, sky cooling effectiveness. All this to say results will be coming in a few months more.
Thanks for the update, keep them coming!
I first discovered your channel when I was 12 in the good old days of actual life hacks and cool experiments. You were one of my favorite channels among CRH, hacksmith, TKOR to name a few. I am now 21 and you have consistently amazed me and thought me more than school ever did and I want to express my gratitude and love for what you do and who you are. Thank you.
Thank you very much!
I gave this a thumbs up, but edit your shit. Although, the misspelled word does lend credence to your claim. Ha!
@@Nighthawkinlight hacksmith and tkor fell a LONG way. Good job staying human and making good stuff and explaining stuff without taking the audience for morons. your channel is one of the very few I still watch and follow, even after touching grass.
👏👏👏👍
Put his money where his mouth was, eh? ❤❤❤
No joke, as a PhD candidate, I feel like you’re genuinely putting a lot of scientists to shame with such an excellent presentation. This is what good science is, not this ivory tower crap we’ve got so much of now. My PI acts like we’re real hot shit just because we have some reasonably fancy and nice equipment, but the way we do science is just not the way it should be, and you’re demonstrating how great science is when you do it right
Thanks, that's a high compliment
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket It's a bit of an oversimplification. It's easier to get published if you already have a good reputation, but it's entirely possible to publish without a reputation as well. The real problem are the large journals/publishers like Springer et al.
As a non-established scientist you're probably better off publishing to SciHub than through a traditional publisher...
Maybe we shoud ignore the fact that the "ivory tower crap" he points out around 18:07 had conclusions which "were super helpful".
The thing is, What you can start exploring depends on what you Know.
All learning is Good.
Having fancy machines can make some things so much easier to explore, which is Hot Shit !
I’m an undergrad involved in research and it pisses me off. We spend as much as the government will give us and get equipment that’s like $50 for a nut and our experiments don’t go anywhere because the shit breaks and there’s no one to fix it. I could do so much more with $2000 than my PI. He’s great, but science, like government, is too big and wasteful to do anything good nowadays. We should be exploding with knowledge because of the exponential growth of knowledge, but we aren’t because it’s being bogged down with white collar bullshit and they spend all their time in worthless fucking meetings while my own interests and ideas aren’t shit to them. I’m gonna save the world without them and do it on my own or with people who are actually bent on making progress.
As a chemist, I love how you make things my colleagues and I would spend thousands of dollars on to research, just with household objects. You are an inspiration.
Seriously, this dude is a legend. Been following his channel for years and he's like a blue collar Einstein. Probably a better comparison out there, I just can't think atm. His channel has gotten me through so many at home projects.
Er, about those thousands of dollars - where do i send my bank details ?
I always like when it's chemistry one can do at home too since I no longer have access to all the fancy stuff in the lab.
I didn't scroll through all the comments, but in case no one else mentioned this about research article fees: when you hit a paywall (i.e., a journal wants to charge you for an article) you can often email the authors (especially the marked "corresponding author") and ask for a copy of the article and they will usually send you a copy for free if it's for educational purposes.
Those article fees are ridiculous and anyone doing educational stuff like this should not have to pay them out of pocket!
Also, like a lot of others said, this is really impressive work. Thank you for sharing!
and not a cent of that goes back to the authors. It's one of the most heinous crimes in academia.
@@272arshan FACTS
This is the first time I've given money to a UA-cam creator. And I'm not even 25% of the way through. You deserve so much more for this incredible invention. I'm blown away that you are giving away this technology.
Thank you very much!
There is super white paint out to buy that cools items it's painted on
@@AstralKetamineX does it cool to below ambient temps? im aware of highly reflective paints that prevent heat absorption, but the ability to radiate heat to sub-ambient temperatures would surprise me. brand?
and this is the first time i see a donation in the comments section
@@mineyoucraftube1768 and there are a lot in this one.
I worked in the coating industry as a formulator for about 10 years. For application you can potentially look into wire bar applicators to help apply an even surface. Application also depends on if the paint has a low enough viscosity and a low enough surface tension to be able to self level. You could also look into addition of a wetting agent which would likely be some sort of surfactant. Ideally this coating could be made much much thinner in which case you need to ensure an even dispersion of the particles without aglomeration. I loved this video and the level of instruction and detail!
If you had a thinner paint wouldn’t you need to apply more coats to achieve the same reflective efficiency?
Thanks for the advice!
@@jeremybyington I would think that getting it into a paintable formulation (brush or roller) would be a benefit outweighing the need for any large number of coats to achieve efficacy.
@@jeremybyington I guess it depends on how much of the effect is just a surface effect. Reflectance portion is surface effect. I'm not 100% about the emission part.
I was wondering if this could be screen printed. Perhaps on a shirt even....
I have a feeling that in 20 - 40 years a bunch of really accomplished people will cite you as an important childhood influence. I can't think of another time where the process of making & iterating has been so visible.
My 8 year old watches with me. He wants to be an inventor. :)
@@jerbear7952based son
My interest in science and research has been shaped by people like you on UA-cam. Thank you for your efforts. It has made a big difference to many people.
Thank you very much!
Thank you for putting your money into something that is useful... for people like me .. poor but can benefit from this person ... I hope my idea comes thru
I normally don't comment on videos, but I just wanted to say that the content you are creating is singlehandedly pushing the boundaries of home science. In addition to how well the information was presented, this discovery could absolutely be a breakthrough in home cooling, and it is done using very simple materials and at a level that anybody could replicate. This is truly inspirational material for any future scientists; please keep up the great work.
Former STEM grad student here - I've seen the term "citizen science" thrown around in research papers! It's exciting to see breakthroughs like this happen in an accessible way!
I've said before that developing this into a quality coating material should be a government initiative and the product should be sold at scaled prices to an individuals income level with limits to allow enough paint per person to use for personal use. This technology clearly has the capability to effect our national electric consumption for cooling costs measurably across the sun belt for a large portion of the year and if leveraged into removable panels, could impact even more northern areas for the Summer months.
I think we are fast reaching the point that everyone should be contacting their government representatives to make this happen.
@@brianmi40 Will be doing that soon. Are you interested?
@@surajchougule4351 Thanks, I've picked up everything myself to make a batch, including 2 different mediums to apply it with (i.e. Spar Urethane). Am traveling now, but when home next I'll be making a small test batch and working on getting a good medium and proper mix to achieve the reflectivity.
In the meantime, more than a little shocked someone didn't immediately contact the Purdue guys and get this headed into the market.
SOMEONE is going to sell a LOT of this when that happens and the roofing manufacturer that gets it integrated into their product will do the same.
Happy to swap notes though.
What a legend. The open source approach to sharing your education and the discoveries you've made with us, is nothing short of amazing. Your consummate scientific brilliance is admirable.
Thank you for this gift sir
Recommendation for paint/coating application: Attach two parallel guide rails to your canvas, place a dollop of your coating at one end, and use a squeegee perpendicular to the guide rails, wiping down to spread the coating evenly across the rest of the canvas. The height of the guide rails will determine the thickness of the coating.
Screenprinting.... without the screen. Clever :)
That's pretty much what I was thinking, at the right consistency this is less of a paint and more of a putty or paste. Would be pretty trivial to skim-coat large surfaces with a similar method to how you apply drywall mud or plaster on walls.
It might be possible to have a solder mask cut (probably in a diamond grid pattern) so you could apply it the same way as a pcb gets pasted. You'd probably need a more viscous coating for it to work though. Spread it on with a stainless scraper, and remove the mask. The fluid should spread out a bit after its removed, and gravity should flatten it out and fill in the missing spots. You could also play around with the thickness of the stainless mask too.
Nice to see that a few of us came to the same solution! However this would only allow for one size of panel, but especially for experimentation would make everything a lot more consistent
My folks live out in the sticks in Central Texas, no river and no wells. They have a rain catchment system but there’s been no rain so they’ve had to truck in water.
What they do have is humidity. They put a condensation recovery system on their AC and get a good 3-5 gallons a day off the AC for their 150 sq ft cabin.
My Dad and I are trying to figure out how to use these panels as condensate catchers to farm water from the air. Right outta Tattooine :D
We’re also going to cover their water tanks in this stuff and see how it holds up to the weather. The tanks aren’t shaped in a way that allows for the film shield, but right now the dark green tanks heat the water so hot we can’t bathe the baby in it. Just getting it down to ambient would be great.
BTW I knocked together a spreadsheet that gives you volume and price predictions based on how many square feet you want. It’s tuned to the local stores but should be easy to modify. Let me know and I’ll send you a Google doc link. (Edit: I mean, I'm sure you had to price out all that R&D you did, but this one could be published. I can polish it up to make it easier for people to customize)
Still got that floating around?
Aluminum siding has pretty high emissiveness and could work well too.
@@JeronimoStilton14yep I’ve got it somewhere. Sorry I missed your message earlier - if you still want it I’ll send you a link
What were your results with this?
Yeah, you have to live in a place that actually has humidity to be a moisture farmer. Lucas is such a fucking idiot lol
The most altruistic inventor on the internet I know of ! Thank you very much for this amazing contribution ! God bless !
This dude really just out here making lost recipes and coming up with new ones out of the blue every 3-6 months. Never disappoints
It's probably aliens.
When NightHawkInLight drops a 40 minute video, you know he's about to drop some golden knowledge. (Lowkey wanna try this paint on my Sony cameras to see if they would actually work in the Texas sun)
Painting acetone on your cameras probably isn't a great idea
He is the son of Hawkeye from Mash so I would expect nothing less.
@@ChaosPootatojust gotta put non acrylic base coat on it.
@@ChaosPootato Haha Fair enough. Mostly just quipping on something relatable to fellow video/production enthusiasts.
Lol Nice name btw. Got some layers going on there.
Lol i didnt even realise it was 40 minutes lol.
My grandparents used to paint their glass houses with quicklime and soda in the summer.
It does have to be renewed regularly when it rains, but the effect was clearly noticeable as the plants fared better in the heat and water consumption decreased.
I think you should publish a paper on this. You've done the research, you have references to existing literature and you may well have furthered the field. Your brother is a physicist so you have an easy in if necessary. And by publishing a paper you may inspire some scientists ,like those who published the papers you cited, to further improve the method or even some of the things you talked about at the end.
Agreed. Making this a reference-able source could really make a difference.
So some paper mill journal can make 42 dollars per reader selling his work, as he mentions at 12:11? A number of people with experience in the field seem to have found their way to this UA-cam video. What is the future, greedy science and tech journals or AI searches that can find all kinds of information? How many “peer-reviewed articles“ had to be retracted in the last couple of years? I’m certainly no expert, but when a major publisher like Wiley has to shut down 19 journals for low quality, anyone would be skeptical.
@@TupperWallace You're right, no one should try to do anything. Moron.
here is a "pro tip": often you can just email one (or more) of the authors of those papers and just nicely ask them for a copy. Most often they will be happy to share it, since they are scientists and arent even getting paid anything from those absurd prices (they actually have to pay to publish their paper and get nothing in return from the publisher besides being published)
That is, when they respond. I e-mailed an author for a paper about yeast on pineapple rinds and how they develop.
I'm still waiting for a reply to this day.
@@Misack8there’s that site where you can put in the ID# and it gives you the paper..I forget the sites name
@@Thingsandcosas Yeah, but I wanted to go throught legitimate ways before resorting to "other methods"
I have tried it few times but I feel like my emails end up in their spam folder. So I have to use scihub. Itis a blessing for a countless student who can’t dream of paying of that much for single article.
I've tried that a few times with no response, I just use sci-hub now, I already pay for most of the research anyway.
Pouring spheres into the container was a great way to explain the why and how you went about the solution..... I look forward to seeing how well it cools the shed.
I first discovered your channel years ago when you were building pvc air cannons. I was surprised by the innovative yet easily accessible designs for the homemade piston valve. Since then I have watched every new video you post. All of them are very engaging and informative. Your channel stands out as the gold standard for science channels on UA-cam. Now that I'm older and have a job, I can finally repay the creators who have influenced me throughout the years. Keep up the great work!
Thank you very much!
Nighthawk casually returning after 3 months is like an early Christmas gift
❤ I love your teaching
With a bag of white powder 🤭
Unexpected, to say the least. And a subject I myself have explored. 👍
@@thaphreakblue
And he returns with a banger
Bloody hell this is easily more extensive and rigorous research than most PhD thesis. You just doing it for fun and entertainment - let's say I'm strapped in for the ride!
2 million subscribers 392k views in 2 weeks on this video. He's doing for something more than fun.
@@MikeJones-wp2mw Weird take..
@@MikeJones-wp2mw Fine by me. More power to him!
@@zenginellc There's nothing wrong with being paid for your work! Everybody's gotta eat.
@@MikeJones-wp2mw trust me, i'm a PhD student and I saw thousands of euros thrown into messier publications. This is beyond incredible to me tbh.
You are an incredibly generous teacher. And your generosity does not compromise the quality of information. Amazing. Thank you.
I think this is a huge and enormous breakthrough. Maybe because other findings are hidden, but this knowledge given freely to the public is revolutionary
DUDE!! What you did on your “kitchen counter” for less than the cost of of an expensive meal for two was what colleges spend hundreds of thousands on to discover. Well, well done!!
85 % of college is a scam they wast your life indoctrinate you and then if you have a breakthrough Idea they will steal it and if your lucky maybe they will give you a small footnote in the patent that they file on your hard work and maybe and this is a big maybe you will get a $180,000 dollar a year job out of it your insight and hard work, good luck with college, more then likely you will end up working for Burger King or Amazon to pay off your scam debt.
He did a great job. But, it's important to recognize that these radiative cooling ideas are bouncing around everywhere these days. The research that is the foundation of it: chemical, coating, IR cam, atmospheric science is high-funded research. "Standing on the shoulders of giants."
If you take a killer photo with your iPhone does that invalidate, say, Ansel Adams?
Mind that he refers to several papers he read about it.
THAT is where that research money went to and exactly how it should be.
It's almost like academia is broken
Ever price a microscope that can take videos?
I couldn't thank you enough for researching and sharing your findings. You're sharing gives the tools needed for creative minds to develop unique solutions to humanities everyday problems. This video is truly brilliant. Thank you!
Thank you very much!
I love how much effort you put into low cost reproducibility. Technical and monetary barriers often seem to be a main reason new technology takes so long to reach the general public in any substantial way, but when you address it right from the start I think it will help shorten the gap between conceptual and applied technologies.
I can't wait to see what other options you come up with for solvents, binders, and delivery methods for the pigment!
I love when science UA-camrs work well off each other to do cool stuff like this.
You outdid yourself yet again.
What's more this time you even managed to outdo Tech Ingredients which is immensly impressive.
Compare them spraying 50 different coatings over the course of the whole day against your cake frosting application once AND your ingredients are even more accessible.
Bravo! You really could start a chemical company, you're definitely further ahead in this than any research lab out there. And then there's your non-flammable fireworks.
As a chemist, I must admire your dedication. Some of what you have done here might be applicable to making artificial opal from sodium silicate solution , a project that I have been thinking about trying for a long time.
I cannot put to words the amount of information and entertainment I get from this channel on every single video.
As a physicist, your application of research and scientific trial and error is incredible! The thought of microspheres has never crossed my mind before, but the presentation of your methods and all you’ve learned was VERY interesting. Awesome video!
Thank you!
Imagine that! Never crossed your mind, well then it surely must be good science! Lol you never once opened a soil science text book. If you had, you would realize this is based on a a rationale that neglects the biggest detail, which is it won’t work in the weather. All I can chalk that up to is y’all can’t conceive of earth systems. Your chemistry knowledge isn’t framed by how these reactions play out and interact in the environment. The only system that accounts for all of chemistry in a way that demonstrates how the periodic table works is in the soil. If you studied this, you’d realize silicon is best suited, not carbon. It’s like a very basic thing, you either see it or you don’t.
@@pbs41if3lo and behold, a lone youtube commenter who has all of the earth's wisdom.. ;-/
For your comments about using citric acid and it not being picky about water quality afterwards, I'll add that in soapmaking, citric acid gets used commonly and it performs "water softening" in the bar. When mixed with the NaOH used in soapmaking, sodium citrate is made in-situ, and keeps sodium soaps (i.e. sodium + fatty acid) in solution, vs them reacting with calcium and magnesium in the tap water, making calcium or magnesium soaps that are less soluble and leave soap scum, and the suds of the soap are less sensitive to water hardness (to a point, everything has its limits)
What is the usual lye/citric acid ratio?
You should really write a scientific paper about this, to get this out to a wider audience. Your research deserves more recognition
It's sweltering 45 degrees Celsius here in Bangladesh... absolutely loved this video! It really makes sense now... we need more channels like this on UA-cam... ❤
In my experience, if you reach out to the authors of a published paper, they are usually willing to give you the whole paper for free, or at a reduced price.
I tried with that particular paper but no reply.
@@Nighthawkinlight websites like scihub and libgen do help in that regard 😉
Reduced price? I've never seen that. Either they send you the PDF or they don't. Is it even legal to sell the PDF privately, bypassing the journal?
@@unvergebeneid The journal plain doesn't get a say in how you use your paper, because you haven't written it on their behalf. The academic institution though under employ of which you have written it, might have a word, but who knows what word that's gonna be.
I just use sci-hub, papers for free.
you sly dog! using the bird to keep us watching during the sponsored segment is pretty clever.
all jokes aside, you are incredible, your content is incredible, and everything you do is cool, informative, and really feels like you, as a single person, are making real advancements in science for the layman.
The man knows his audience
I'm so glad that you, tech ingredients, and Robert Murray Smith are aware of each other. Stuff is speeding up. 😊
I think you should be given Nobel prize for best video on scientific research which can be practically used for commercial purposes by anyone.
You are not only intelligent, you are a very good, selfless human being too, sharing your knowledge with the world freely
Okay, this earned my Patreon support. I've been a fan for years and I think this video exemplifies why @NightHawkInLight is not only a UA-camr's UA-camr but a genuinely kind and caring human being trying to do his part to make the world a better place. This is such a beautiful application of Open Science and it is an honor to be able to support you in your work. My mind is always blown, I always learn a lot, and I'm always well entertained. Thank you!
Agreed but it also showed an example of a much too common instance of NOT Open Science with the research paper ($42) he purchased that like so many was behind a pay wall. I didn't catch the source of the paper but if it originated from a tax-payer funded institution and was available to the general public, if not freely so, it should not cost the tax-paying citizens to review.
You could keep this all to yourself until you achieve a patentable product and instead you’re doing the right thing and sharing your findings in detail with a global audience. That’s commendable as hell, dude.
technically if he filed a patent now after haven publicly sharing it, its my understanding he can reasonably contest any other patent claims posted after this release date. Hence patent pending; a period of time observed to find other patents or reduce the difficultly to extend or reject said patent based on supporting evidence and ability to file in a reasonable fashion. ~This is not legal advice.
No, he should file a patent. Why would him not doing that be "the right thing"? You don't believe that he should get credit or financial compensation for the work he's done? Is very kind and generous for him to share and the information is great. Doesn't mean he shouldn't get sa patent. I would. And so would you. It would be naive not to do so.
@@ChristaFree He should file a patent if only for the sole purpose of preventing someone else from doing so, and monopolizing it like medical companies did with insulin.
@@adondriel you do know a patent shares the information with the wprld right? You want insulin and dont wanna pay big pharma prices? Look up the patent amd do it yourself. Its only illigal if you get cuaght. And im fairly certain no jury will convict you for making your own insulin.
@@ChristaFree i dont think he created this
Probably going to get lost in the comments, but you should look into silica encapsulation of your particles to waterproof them. Tetraethyl/Tetramethyl Orthosilicate can be used in small quantities to create thin coats around particles of all kinds using many of the same methods you demonstrated, not the safest thing to work with indoors though.
Should be safe if you do it outside and very very carefully. Did a research project with TEOS recently, can confirm it does exactly as you said.
I've been looking into silane as a sealant and adhesion enhancer for hollow microspheres as syntactic foam components. Just my twopence worth... 😉
Do you think just mixing them together might work?
Yes, hydrophobic compound, the most important substance to prevent water absorb and mold growth
how do you make it? there's a simple to buy compound that I could use instead?
I have no words. You're just brilliant. Thank you for your incredible diligence and intellect.
That you very much!
Ben, you can't imagine how precious your videos are to the community. Not only your stuff is really innovative, you also explain the science behind it, give information about your findings, and the best thing is, you make it open source. I'm not sure if you still working as a teacher, but if you do, I hope your students appreciate it.
This channel is a scientific gem. The dedication and innovation is so admirable.
Actually reading the comments? Well I love your informative, cleanly cut, no nonsense videos. You really show off the magic that is chemistry!
You could be developing this shit for millions for companies but you just do it for our entertainment instead xD Love you!
Danke!
I had a dream about making this last night, and painting it on the roofs of houses, after falling asleep while listing to NOVA's "Climate Change Crisis." Hopefully, if I don't get to do that, someone reading this will and we won't fight others doing the same.
I'm passionately inspired and deeply moved by your determination to make this. Thank you for reminding me what it means to be a scientist. I hope you can get nominated a Nobel prize for this contribution to humanity's future.
Thank you very much!
Volcanoes and solar flares have more effect to "climate change" than humans ever will. I have no problem with the paint itself, but don't fall for this media-hype of the world falling apart because too many cows and cars belched out gas that natural processes such as photosynthesis can solve on their own.
any progress on making it a roof coating?
@@darwinjina I work on Buildings as an HVACR dude. Roofs have been increasingly turning from Black to white over the last 20-30 years. (I don't understand why they were black to begin with? Other than glare? But obviously heat efficiency should have always been priority over glare. The problem is keeping them clean, It is literally impossible. Roofing materials are some of the most durable/flex products on the market nowadays and they still stain and get dirty over time. Obviously we walk all over the roof to fix and install things. He brings this up in the video. Still, a white dirty roof is going to be far cooler than a black roof. But the real money in this project is finding a way to get it into PVC or similar roofing materials. Exciting! I love watching nerdy videos like this, and he explains everything in a way we can all understand. New subscriber here!
@@rheadog9546 You answered your own question.
"I don't understand why they were black to begin with? ........
The problem is keeping them clean, It is literally impossible."
Other commenters have said it better, but just, wow. These videos are an inspiration to future generations and show that science is approachable, testable, and practical. Amazing work!
Two things: 1.) I love how proud he is of his work because 2.) he makes it very clear that this is genuinely novel research. I guess a third thing is that science is more accessible than we realize, but what's in short supply is a mindset, not equipment.
for spraying, there are special bigger spraying nozzles for different kinds of substances. The spraying gun used for Plastidip comes to mind. It's very viscous and yet sprays it in fine layers
Unlike some other channels who either flat out lie or did minimal research and then stretch that out to an hour video. With deep sounding music to sound intriguing.
Meanwhile you: Disappears for months, drops a banger of a video full to the brim with interesting easy to digest information that you actually try. I love you man ❤.
Like you can tell that you actually took the time researching the topic and actually putting it to practice and then seeing about how you can put it in laymans terms for us
Wow. He took something extremely technical, took it to the next level and then reduced it to a simple table top industrial process. Well done.
It took me a bit to understand why you want a *mix* of sphere sizes, and not just all the tiniest ones. The answer I came up with is that if you replace one large sphere with an equivalent spatial extent of small spheres, you've introduced coverage gaps inside what was previously covered by a single sphere. Really interesting!
I've just finished replicating your experiment and testing some of the paint. The carbonate particles [I had 25g of them] are a success, they are in fact lower than ambient temperature by 2-5 degrees Fahrenheit even before they're made into a paint. I'm in Las Vegas during the height of summer monsoon season so every degree of difference can save someone's life out here. I have some notes:
-Without a stir-bar, it took a really long time to dissolve the acrylic. I had wondered why the paint was sepparated and thin.
-A painter's knife can apply the paint fantastically
-The smaller sizes of nanoparticles are difficult to sepparate out and I think I must have mistaken a lot of them for wastewater as they didn't sepparate out after days.
-I used a pie tin instead of a bread tin because I'm cheap, it did not work at all.
Thanks for sharing your results!
I have also tried to dissolve the acrylic in acetone with water as they mentioned it in the video... But after 2 hrs of heating at 60degree celsius... It won't dissolved most of the acetone evaporated 2 to 3 times I added it back for balance the solution.. While adding acetone again can we add water on it... Or the temperature🌡️ is maintained as he suggested
@@ragunathl4410 60C is much too warm. It should be more like 38C. You're boiling all the acetone away at 60C.
@@Nighthawkinlight Thanks for the reply...
1.The hard stirring is required or not for dissolve acrylic.
2.Acrylic not dissolve as you shown
3.After the acetone evaporated to the minimum level few ml of resin only I have got...
Kindly suggest me the better procedure for resin making
Your multiple rinse steps may actually shrink the size of your microspheres a bit. Nanoparticles have a very large surface area so, even though CaCO3 is pretty insoluble some it will dissolve in the rinse water. I discovered this was true when I tried making magnesium fluoride nanoparticles (as a polishing agent). Multiple wash cycles eventually caused the MgF2 to totally disappear! Using LeChatelier's Principle, I found that adding a very small amount of a water-soluble magnesium salt prevented this.
You also might be able to use this "problem" to your advantage if your smallest particles aren't quite small enough.
This is a wonderful tip which invites an experiment!
Holy crap, this is genius.
Just off the top of my head I feel like the most important parameters to test are to find a way to determine how much (if any) the Water temperature, Duration of each wash cycle and the nanoparticles size will contribute to how much degradation (shrinking) of the spheres occurs.
Once a consistent method of testing these parameters is developed and employed, this can be applied with a large array of applications where density, temperature and likewise even pressure (such as hydrostatic pressure in any type of stratified fluid) are key principles to how efficient said application can be.
Like using Aqua Regia for dissolving Gold.
I'm stunned by the amount of push you gave to this technology, and then I'm stunned you made it free, for everyone. Ben, if there's a time for you to feel accomplished, now's the time!
A coarse threaded rod should approximate a Mayer rod, for a quick trial. Also, this was a staggering amount of r&d and one of best chemistry videos on UA-cam that I have ever viewed. Well done!
That’s a shame bc this is not chemistry. This growing a chemical garden. You can buy a kit if you want to hear words like nucleation and be impressed
@@pbs41if3Note they said best chemistry video, not best chemistry in a video. There is a difference, and the snobbery shown in your comment is ill-suited to the comment section of an *educational* video.
11/10
extra point for putting BOM and steps in the video description.
simply amazing.
I live in a 29 foot long, 7.5 foot wide fifth wheel. That's a BIG metal box. My brother lives in a 10 ft wide and 50 ft long mobile home- a bigger metal box. Here in New Mexico, it's HOT, HOT, HOT in the summer. This could not only help people, save money but it could save lives in the summer!
I have considered putting this as a top coat on my Swamp Cooler. I also live in New Mexico.
I'm in a tailor. That cooks in the hot months
I'm in a 10x12 with a sleeping loft and it's so hot up there it actually takes your breath no joke you can not breath up there from 11am to 3am in the summer leaving me a extremely hot old lady😂😂😂 seriously I spend most of my time outside talk about climate change hot as f k in the summer and cold as f k in the winter there is no happy medium.
It's either or never just right ever.
Have you considered not living in a desert?
Dude… this is INCREDIBLE. I’ve been super fascinated with these paints since that paper come out a while back. The fact that you developed a method to create this type of coating from cheap and easily accessible materials is so inspiring.
You seemed to have nailed the creation of the pigment, so I think a big next step for the community is finding a more durable and applicable base to suspend it in. 🤔 Great work!
Hello.
@@Jamey_ETHZurich_TUe_RulezYeah, try to cool a house with a fan (and it doesn't consume energy at all, yeah). I don't see a problem with protection if it's just a plastic film (or some sort of other coating)
Dude, there are some damn smart people on UA-cam and you are on the short list at the top. Your videos have always been impressive, but this one is out of the park.
As a side note, this is what the internet was designed for. What the academics, engineers, programmers, etc. were all working for. A place to share great ideas with the world. And for those ideas to get improved by others, which then leads to more improvement. Which is friggin awesome!
Like literally though, it was made to share scientific discoveries, papers, data. That was it's original purpose, back when that one guy connected all the computers around CERN to do just that. And then someone went: "Wait, what if this, but worldwide though?"
We need more people like him who share valuable, important, helpful information (simplified) for a better world.
Just made it to the point you mentioned a white paper you ended up buying access to. Barring a few contracts, the researchers don't see any of that profit, so if you contact them directly they are usually more than happy to send you the whole paper themselves for free. Often, they end up interested enough to answer some questions too.
Couldn't get a reply this time unfortunately
@@Nighthawkinlight To add to this, there is an even easier solution: most universities have some public-access computers within the university domain, which generally has no-login access to any databases of papers (usually guest computers in the library). Or, just ask a friend who works for a university? It doesn't cost us anything to download individual papers the uni subscribes to, and everyone thinks the per-paper model is terrible.
You probably wouldn't believe me when i say that part of my choice to become an engeneer comes from this channel and your awesome ability to teach (i started watching this when i was 14 and now i am 18). Thanks for your dedication and keep up the good work, love from Italy
If you want to know and teach chemistry. Study agriculture. Everything you need to know about chemistry happens in the soil. It’s literally the interface between biology and geology. He’s taking a snapshot out of context that can be only appreciated after studying the whole picture. Draw your inspiration from how soils work. Want to learn about packing densities? Look at the molecular chemistry of clay aggregates. It’ll get heady very quickly and you’ll be sorry you underestimate the intricacies of soil.
You should try screen printing as a method of applying your mixture. It produces very even layering but you are constrained by the size of the frame used to hold the silkscreen taut. No need to expose a pattern on the silkscreen, you can just place it on your substrate and squeegee the mixture through the screen to apply it on the substrate.
I just posted the same idea and then scrolled down to read the other comments and found you had beat me to it, the only difference in my idea was to just have runners/rails/shims that are the height of the desired paint thickness on the side of the substrate that the scraper/squeegee would ride on. You could easily "paint" a 4x8 sheet of plywood with a concrete bull float riding on a few rails.
I was thinking screen printing while watching the video. I’m not sure that silk screen will give a thick enough coating on one go and wonder whether wire fly screen could be a good option. For thicker coating.
As a screen printer, this is exactly where my mind was going. The screens/applicators could be made very quickly and easily. Just get a large portion of mesh with a micron size that allows for the larger particles to pass through. I’m sure this could be aerosolized as well. There are plenty of differently sized nozzles for paint guns. I just came back from a low rider show and some of the flake used in the paint jobs has to be a good amount larger diameter than the microspheres he’s using in the process.
Also. If the paint is self-leveling to a degree, why not just use a roller to apply it to larger surfaces?
Wow wonderful job! This would be perfect for a small home, or tent! Maybe if the paint is combined with something that can flex, such as a fabric, or maybe vinyl it is possible to create a super cooling shirt! This could be the future of fabrics, especially in the hot sun! I could see plenty of uses for this for maybe even shade structures, to keep everyone underneath cool.
The idea of cooling fabrics immediately makes me think of nano-engineering. Maybe we can “tune” textiles with quantum dot technology to absorb heat when cold and radiate it away when hot. This breakthrough could be on par with semiconductors in terms of potential industries with applications including transportation, energy, housing, fashion, agriculture, and who knows what else?!?!
Love the level of high quality editing and depth of research
Thank you!
Packing multi-sized spheres has been around a long time, but making them small enough to have a paint which goes on fairly thin is tough. Making all that with ingredients which will reflect IR is pretty amazing.
I think you are the only practical science UA-camr who consistently impresses me. It doesn't matter how boring or irrelevant I think the subject is going to be to me, I always watch all the way through. What's more, I always want to replicate your projects. Even if I know I will never put it to practical use.
There are a handful of other affable and infectiously passionate science-tubers, but you fill a singular niche that I lack the skills to describe. It's a wonderful niche, keep it up.
I'd put Tech Ingredients up there too. Few others explain as comprehensively as Nighthawk or TI. IMO this is what YT is for!
Absolutely incredible and mind blowing. If you were a science teacher, you would have students that would not only LOVE your class but would be totally influenced and involved in everything that you presented to them. I’m almost 70 and I have always loved science and chemistry, this is how I felt the whole time I was watching this. That mixture change and what happened was amazing. I’m now hooked and have subscribed. I found this by researching a good homemade stain remover, go figure, down through the line somehow there you were.
Not sure about other countries, but in Hungary, CaCO3 is traditionally used to paint exterior house walls, although not as commonly nowadays. By heating CaCO3, CO2 is released, and CaO (égetett mész) remains. Adding water to it, you get Ca(OH)2 (oltott mész) and heat. That can be painted on the walls, and it absorbs CO2 from the air, and hardens to a white paint of CaCO3 (mész).
Also known as lime wash in other parts of the world. Plus if you make it out of sea shells instead of mined rock it's carbon neutral.
We have this too, 30 years ago we used to spray it almost everywhere except inside the house. Trees, work shops, animal dens, concrete fences, those big round vents in an energy/heating plant. I want to see a comparison now to see how much his method improves it, I bet that acrylic will really give it a boost.
But this dissolves back to water in the rain. So it needs a protection layer.
@@alexlo7708 It shouldn't, unless you have acid rain. And it's repainted every couple of years.
@@szaszm_ Every limestone can dissolve in water. Acid just speeds up the process. Out of dissolve problem, there are still problem on dirty surface from any cause which it raises up heat.
What a freaking legend! NightHawk is the only channel that can drop a 40-minute video that I will drop everything to watch. This is probably the coolest science video I've watched on UA-cam that actually makes me want to try it out for myself.
NightHawkInLight produces great content with experiments that are accessible to the masses, but in my opinion Applied Science has the most cutting edge stuff. Not really the sort of things you can make at home unless you're quite wealthy and have a few PhDs though.
Simply Brilliant.
It brings me great joy that there are almost a million people who care enough about chemistry to watch a 40 minute presentation on the thermal dynamic properties of home made paint.
Making this commercially viable would most certainly bring the IRE of the Air Conditioning Cartels... actually the people that own the patents on "legal and approved AC Refrigerant"..
which last I checked was Honeywell.
That shrinking you're seeing is from solvents evaporating. It is a common occurrence on pretty much anything that has solvents. My first thought about that is that by adding a plastesiser (something to keep the material flexible at all times) this shrinking and cracking can be negates since the material will just stretch a bit. And while originally low concentration of wood glue came to mind, you mentioned silicone and that would be a much better choice. While silicone can be thinned with acetone, your idea of xylol from the "make any fabric waterproof" could work better. Mix some of it with the acetone-based coating and you should get a semi-flexible coating that won't crack. Moreover, using a thinner xylol-silicone mix might even allow for this to be a fabric soak instead of just coating. Imagine an outdoor canopy or an umbrella that actually reflects heat!
Speaking of thinned acetone. I mixed a batch of it for a small project (balljoint 'boots' for a go-kart, used fabric hose sleeve as the substrate). Even though i kept the mix in a sealed jar, after a month i am noticing that the silicone is slowly curing (polymerizing?) in the mix, turning into a rather odd gel-like material that can't even hold a shape. By now it feels like what you'd imagine a jellyfish feeling like. A rather curious substance that will no longer soak into fabric, but i'm sure there are other uses for it. Need to let a bit of it dry out and see what happens.
What does AgentGordon think of your suggestions? 🙂
artists sometimes add glycerol to prevent cracking by increasing the drying time. Know that thickens it too though and not sure how it plays with various solvents
This was really an excellent video! I love your content but if you'd told me i would be staying up at 5am to watch someone make paint I wouldn't have believed it. I don't have any particular use or intention of making this, at least for now. But the processes involved and how you took us along on your journey was very satisfying and I thank you for doing this. And you and your bird are clearly good friends which is a beautiful thing.
Best comment, I laughed out loud. I thought the very same thing, why am I watching this guy make paint So fascinating to watch and learn.
This is incredible! Keeping a surface that's in the sun to a few degrees lower than a piece in the shade is something I'd be extremely skeptical of if I just randomly read about it. Making it at home is on a whole other level too. Great work!
Thank you thank you thank you!!! ❤❤❤
It gets unbelievably HOT in Arizona! This can save so much money for folks! We spend $700 a month for air conditioning and I’ve been trying to find helpful videos and ideas to keep the house cool without having to use air conditioning! Thank you for sharing all of this important information FOR FREE 🔥🔥🔥
The level of research and analysis in this video is absolutely incredible, and is so much more advanced than a lot of research papers on the subject. I'm so proud of people like you who are able to advance science for the rest of humanity with basic tools accessible to everyone.
I loved every second of this video. I have been following radiative cooling for years now. I am Software developer by profession but always wanted to make my own radiative cooling project. You just made the whole thing seem so easy. Thank you for sharing!! Lots of love from India.
I love how you research semi-niche potentially very useful technologies and then share your results to everyone to learn from!
Thank you for your contribution to humanity, you have a greater impact than you can imagine.
Greetings from Greece!
The way you are inventing truly innovative and socially productive things out of such accessible resources using principles of chemistry and the scientific method, is incredibly fascinating. I have never seen anything quite like it on UA-cam.
Your video, research and intentions deserves appreciation ❤... I am from Pakistan, where its too hot in summer and electricity is even more expensive... Its awesome to make your own paint and cool down your property so cheaply... Hats off to your intentions to make the world a better place...
This is what I like to see. I live in the northern US, so it is cold more often than it is hot, so I would have to make removable panels or maybe canvas over my house, or it would make my house even more expensive to heat in the winter! 😳But for you and others in very hot climates, especially in developing areas, this is perfect for you! I love when good people share good science with the world!
I think I saw a video where some people in India were using plastic soda bottles embedded into a panel to make a breeze-powered air conditioner, using the venturi effect. Combine that with the paint here, it might make a big difference. Also search for Iranian cooling tower architecture. They could make ice in the middle of the desert, long before.electricity came along.
@@jkurrle1 Do you happen to have a link or two about these?
@@jkurrle1 I saw that documentary as well although forget if it was on History Channel, PBS or something else?
you, applied science, braking taps, tech ingredients, thought emporium and others are doing a great job making highly specific and technical knowledge available to laypeople like me.
Imagine the kind of world we would have with more contributions like this one. I'm humbled, amazed and grateful! This is beyond generosity, this builds humanity!
Man, the variety and scope of applications for this pigment is inspiring. Thank you for making this research so accessable! You're the highest class of scientist.
The way you go through your experimental process, factor choices, and null findings is fantastic. I wish more papers were written with this kind of detail. It would save a lot of us a lot of time.
For applying this coating, mix it to a mortar-like consistency and use a grooved trowel of the sort used for laying tile. The grooves make it easy to get an extremely consistent amount of material spread across a surface, and then the smooth side of the trowel smooths over the grooves to give a flat surface.
Ha, I should have read more comments before replying this same idea.
I was thinking something similar. Flooring contractors have a refillable caulk gun that they use to lay mortar for tile and it has different nozzles for smooth or ridged surfaces
Same idea…. 9 comments after this😂 deleted mine
Keeping the coating more textured instead of smoothing it over might actually be better. More surface area means more radiation, and therefore more cooling.
Just like the method used in screen printing of PCBs. Maybe that'll work too.
Thanks
i don't know how you make all this seemingly long and frustrating work turn into such a relaxing and entertaining video. good stuff!
You're one hell of a genius. It's amazing how resourceful you are! To create a safe, cheap and effective recipe for such a novel area, with so few useful learning resources, it's insane!
Most people have a hard time replicating thorough and well understood recipes, but you can create something like this with so few resources.
You truly deserve all the success in the world!
Amazing how you've continued to evolve over 10 years. Started out very similar to the old style King Of Random and migrated to being applied science! Really awesome
For another applicator possibility, look up gold sniping. Gold prospectors use PVC to build a suction tube, like a reverse plunger, to suck fine, gold bearing material from cracks in river beds. It's like a big syringe. You could ad an end cap of PVC that's been heated and squished in a vice to give a flat applicator that you could also pull back on the handle to keep back pressure on the paint and prevent it from leaking out.
You are easily one of the most wholesome science channels on here. Cutting edge technology translated into a form not only understandable but accessible to the common man is about as virtuous an activity as I can fathom. I have a playlist of “science references” for my own hobbyist projects and your videos make up half that alongside the likes of Nilered, nurdrage, and codyslab. You are truly one of the greats!